Total pages in book: 58
Estimated words: 54645 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 273(@200wpm)___ 219(@250wpm)___ 182(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 54645 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 273(@200wpm)___ 219(@250wpm)___ 182(@300wpm)
I rip open the envelope, slicing a deep papercut into my finger as I do. I hiss in pain, sucking hard on my finger to soothe the sting.
On the page are the words I have been dreading. I read them twice, three times, four times. But the words don’t change. And neither does my terror.
Peek-a-boo. Found you.
Keep that pretty little mouth shut or I’ll be back to shut it for you.
Dusk is falling. Edward tries to make small talk throughout the drive, through the gridlock of rush hour traffic, but I don’t have the energy to keep the conversation going. Eventually, he gets the hint, and we drive the rest of the way in silence.
All I have ever wanted is a simple life. I have never asked for much, never expected much. But now I have to get used to the realization that Corsicov Rominovski has found me. Again.
That my shadow has caught up with me.
That the ghost that haunts me has found me at last.
In some ways, it’s a relief. A terrifying relief. Because I knew, one day, this day would come.
And now it has.
I glance down at the note, read the words one final time, and then slip the paper into my purse.
Now, more than ever, I need to put things right with Trent. I have no one else to protect me, nowhere else to turn. But the very thought of him makes my heart swell. A rumbling volcano.
Edward pulls up into the circular drive and I get out, making my way to the front door, which I find unlocked.
The feeling of the knob on my hand, the smell of the new house with its perfect furnishings, it confirms what I have known in my heart since the second I read that note.
Trent and I are going to have to talk.
We cannot be more than brother and sister. Step or no step.
Because right now, I need my brother more than anyone in the world.
CHAPTER 8
Kat
The lights on the first floor are off, except for the light above the stove. Somehow, I know that he’s upstairs, so I tiptoe up the curved staircase, gathering my courage with every step. I make my way down the hallway and peek inside the master bedroom. He’s sitting in one of the chairs that looks out on the lake. On the table beside him is a half-finished beer.
“Trent…” I’m not sure what to say, but I need to start somewhere.
He doesn’t answer, but stands up, squaring his broad shoulders to me, his hands in the pockets of his camo pants. He hasn’t changed, hasn’t taken that shower. His body is still naked from the waist up. His muscles flex and move the shapes of his tattoos. Ripples and bulges.
I swallow hard, struggling to find the words.
There’s a heat in his eyes. A molten desire. It takes my breath away.
He glances at his bandages. “I need you. I told you. I need your help. Where have you been? I’ve been calling you.”
I pull my phone out of my pocket and try to turn it on. All I get is the charge battery symbol. “You don’t even have a phone you said.”
“There’s a fucking landline in the hall. When I call, I expect you to answer,” he growls, and my hackles raise even as a throb starts between my legs. “You keep your phone charged, got it? And you go somewhere, you tell me first.”
“I’m sorry. I just…I shouldn’t have left without telling you.”
“No. You fucking shouldn’t.”
“Next time…”
“There isn’t going to be a next time because I’m not letting you out of my sight.” He picks up the medical kit from the bag, and leads me toward the master bathroom, so sure that I’ll follow. He blinks once. His long lashes dusting his cheeks. “It’s fine. But I need your help. Now.”
It’s beautiful. Immaculate. White marble and gleaming fixtures. The wealth and plenty of it all stands in such sharp contrast to a lifetime of never enough. “This place really is out of a dream.”
He smiles at me. That white smile, mirrored back at me a hundred different ways from the mirrors that surround us. His powerful manner. This way he has about him. His presence. It always puts me at ease. But his smile shifts briefly into a wince, and I see that on each bandage are tiny pinpricks of blood from his wounds underneath.
“Oh, Trent.”
“It’s fine, Kat. Let’s just get them cleaned.”
For now, for this moment, I decide to forget about everything—about the heat between us, about Rominovski, about the sketches, the notebook. All of it.
He braces his arms on the countertop, letting his head drop. The sinewy muscles of his traps and delts bulge in the warm light.
Very slowly, very gently, I peel off the bandages on his back, careful to go slow, careful not to pull at the skin. The wounds below are bad, but healing. Seeing them makes my body roll with agony. His pain is my pain. His hurt is my hurt.